Essential newborn care practices at health facilities and homes in Ethiopia: A cross-sectional study

Author:

Guadu Tadesse1,Alemu Kassahun1,Schellenberg Joanna2,Berhanu Della2,Lemma Seblewengel2,Defar Atkure2,Getachew Theodros3,Taye Girum3,Shiferaw Solomon4,Abdissa Zewditu1,Tariku Amare1,Zelalem Meseret5,Persson Lars Åke2

Affiliation:

1. University of Gondar

2. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

3. Ethiopian Public Health Institute

4. Addis Ababa University

5. Ministry of Health

Abstract

Abstract Background WHO recommends a set of essential newborn care practices that every newborn baby needs for health and survival regardless of birthplace. Previous Ethiopian studies of these actions had long recall periods, and most considered either facility or home deliveries. We aimed to assess selected practices, i.e., thermal care, cord care, initiation of breastfeeding, and first six-weeks immunizations among neonates born at health facilities and homes in Ethiopia. Methods We used data from the Performance Monitoring for Action Ethiopia 2019–2021 survey and analyzed 2,493 live births who completed interviews at six weeks postpartum in five regions, namely Tigray, Afar, Amhara, Oromia, Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples regions, and Addis Ababa. Practices were assessed using an interviewer-administered questionnaire. Essential newborn care indicators were analyzed among neonates born at health facilities and homes and expressed as proportions with a 95% confidence interval. Clustering was accounted for in all analyses. Results Practices were assessed among 1543 (62%) facility-delivered and 950 (38%) home-delivered neonates. Some of the appropriate actions had higher coverage among facility-delivered vs. home-delivered neonates: skin-to-skin care 76% vs. 8%, immediate drying and wrapping with a cloth 80% vs. 79%, delayed bathing until 24 hours after birth 72% vs. 39%, appropriate instrument to cut the cord 100% vs. 94%, use of new or boiled instrument 90% vs. 79%, nothing or chlorhexidine applied on cord 89% vs. 64%, first-hour initiation of breastfeeding 69% vs. 62%, and BCG and first polio immunization within the first six weeks after birth 54% vs. 19%. Thermal care, cord care and provision of vaccines at birth were relatively better in Addis Ababa, while first-hour breastfeeding initiation was higher in Oromia region. Conclusion Neonates born at health facilities had higher, although not optimal, coverage of thermal care, cord care, early initiation of breastfeeding, and the first immunizations. Strengthening the health extension program to promote facility delivery, further enhancing the coverage and quality of essential newborn care at health facilities, and increasing the coverage of first vaccinations and other essential services after birth is crucial for improving neonatal health and survival in Ethiopia.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference30 articles.

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3. WHO, United Nations Children’s Fund. Every Newborn: an action plan to end preventable deaths. 2014. https://www.healthynewbornnetwork.org/resource/every-newborn-action-plan/. (Accessed November 15, 2023).

4. Newborn care practices at home and in health facilities in 4 regions of Ethiopia;Callaghan-Koru JA;BMC Pediatr,2013

5. How Ethiopia achieved Millennium Development Goal 4 through multisectoral interventions: a Countdown to 2015 case study;Ruducha J;The Lancet Global health,2017

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